Richmond Palladium (Daily), 30 July 1904 — Page 6

fiionziotn) daily pallad

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1904.

TRAINS Every Day Iloneie, llarion, Pern and Northern Indiana cities via C. G & L. Leave Richmond Daily, except Sunday, 6:15 am, 7:05 pin. 11:05 a m d'ly Sunday only, 9:35 p m. Through tickets soiu to all points. For particulars enquire of O. A. Blair. C. P. A, Home Tel. 44 (0) ATE NTS sr I Js will advise you whether your ideas II can be patented. Small improveII ments and simple inventions have made much money for the inventors. We develope your ideas or assist youin improving your invention. We takeout patents in United States, Canada and foreign countries. Our terms are reasonable. Marlatt & Dozier, 42-43 Colorlal Bldg. Richmond CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH ratlYROYAL PILLS yrv. Urlfflnal ana uniy ueauine. iSArE. Alv rrn.nie. uam ui urafpn for CIlICMJTKlt E KNULiSH i in KElk nJ (-old metallic Coin. Kslec I with bu rtoboo. Take no other. Krniiw I liwceraa Substitution, and lmfta tlBK. But of jour Droggiiit. or wnil 4c. impi far Partl'-ulans Testimonial! nd "Relief for Ladle" n Utttr, by re turn Mail. 1 MMM Testimonial. Sold bi i DrugfLtn. ChlcheaterChenileal Co. ipapw. Madlaoa Kgura. fill 11. f MONEY TO -LOAN. 5 and 6 per cent. Interest FIRE INSURANCE, In the leading companies. Managers for the EQUITABLE LIFE Assurance Society of New York. THE 0. B. FULGHAM AGENCY O. B. Fulgham. H. Milton Elrode Room 3, Yaughan Bldg. The greatest money making inventions have been suggested by minds familiar with the needs of the, age. . THE AMERICAN INVENTOR keep you fat touch with subiects of current interest in the ftne of new inventions and experiment. It will aid you to develop ideas of practical value. Issued on the 1st and 15th of every month. Twenty-eight pages each Issue. Sold at afl aevt stend 10c per copy or sent by mail $1.50 per year. THE AMERICAN INVENTOR. I Sample copy sent free.' Washington. D. C THE SHIRT WAIST is agitating QUESTION the men. Not bothering us much, however, shirtwaists, we will do the laundering. Carpents Cleaned by a New Process THE RICHMOND STEAM LAUNDRY O. G. mUSSAYi Broker in Grain Provisions and Stocks., Room 1, Colonial Building ' Telephones-Old, Black 311; JSewTOl' Ml ...H-H-M-M I1 1 'M"H VJHEN IN CHICAGO Stop at thm fJetv l!ordBsemni Bthm HotmlOombhtmd 8 Boor. Fiaa new room. Meals a-I-Cart at all hours. BATHS OF ALL KINDS Turkish. Russian. Shower, Plunge, etc Th fir est wimuiine pool in the world. Turkish Bath and Lodging, $1.00. Most inexpensive first class hotel ia Chicago. Right iu th& haaft of the city. Booklet on application. Now Itorthorn Bathn & Hotol 14 Onlncy St. CHICAGO Near State

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UISMI PACIFIC AND WABASH

PLANS SAID TO BE PERFECTED FOR CONSOLIDATING THE TWO BIG LINES Plan Has Been Under Gould's Hat For Some Time Ramsey Silent on Subject. St. Louis, July 29. Upon most excellent authority in the railroad world it was learned here that plans are being perfected for the merging of the Missouri Pacific and Wabash Railroad systems as soon as George J. Gould, president of the Missouri Pacific, shall have returned from Europe The plan embraces making Joseph Ramsey, Jr., now present head of the Wabash, president of both lines. With the appointment of Mr. Ramsey as chief executor of the merged system the question of who would succeed Russell Harding, vice president and general manager of the Missouri Pacific, who recently resigned to accept an executive position with the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton, will have been disposed of. It is an open secret among well-in- j formed railroad men that Mr. Gould for a long time has had under consideration the feasibility of consolidating his two leading railroads. With this end in view it is believed he brought about the consolidation of his lines east of Pittsburg, and it is known that his counsel are now at work on a scheme for the merging of all the Gould lines west of Pittsburg. The resignation of Mr. Harding and the necessity of having a first-class operating official are said to have in a sense forced the issue. Mr. GoukK as president of the Missouri Pacific, has not the time to give to the system which he desires, and in Mr. Ramsey it is believed he has picked the most eligible man to take charge of the combined properties. In St. Louis Mr. Ramsey would be in the ideal geographical position for operating both systems. He has recently completed the Pittsburg extension of the Wabash, which was built at great cost. Mr. Ramsey last night refused to confirm or deny the report of the consolidation, but said any such deal could not be effected until after the return of Mr. Gould from Europe in September. He said Mr. Harding would remain in charge of the Missouri Pacific till that time. Even a Soic Groans under the torment of neuralgia, when every nerve in face or limb throbs and jumps. Philosophy cannot endure this agony but Perry Davis' Pain killer relieves it. Bathe the affected parts freely, keep them warm and do not expose yourself to cold and dampness. Medical science marches right along, but it has not found the equal of Painkiller in the treatment of neuralgia. San Francisco and Return From Chicago, 111., $01.00 going one way via Canadian Pacific Ry., through the world-famous Canadian Rockies with their 600 miles of Stupendous Mountain Peaks, Awe Inspiring Canons, and Mighty Cataracts. Tickets good to go Aug. 15th to Sept. 10th, Proportionate rates from all other points. All agents can sell tickets by this route. For further information and illustrated literature write, A. C. Shaw. Gen'l. Ajrt.. Chicago. $50.00 California and Return. Send 2 cent stamp for itinerary of special personally conducted tours to California, leaving Chicago August 18th and 25th, via the Chicago. Union Pacific & North-Western Line, account Triennial Conclave Knights Templar at San Francisco. $50 round trip from Chicago. Correspondingly low rates from all points. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111. Personally Conducted Tour, Tent City Club, to Coronado Beach, Cal. A delightful summer tour, personally conducted by representatives of the Pennsylvania and Santa Fe Lines. Special train will leave Richmond about eleven o'clock a. m. Tuesday, August 16th. Fare for the round trip from Richmond $50.50. Choice of direct routes returning. For itinerary and detail information address or apply to C. W. Elmer, Passenger and Ticket Agent.

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Some Good League Wor (Chicago Record Herald.) The city of Scranton, Pa., does not loom up very large on the I map but when it comes to giving the country an illustration of what can be done by civie organization in the way of suppressing gambling and enforcing the liquor laws it is big enough to demand more than passing notice. Three or four years ago Scranton was in a political "slough of despond." Aldermen were in corrupt partnership with evil-doers, the jury system was rotten and wide-open gambling flourished. As usual, when the civic conscience is aroused, the work of "cleaning up" the tow nfell to a municipal league, and the work has been done so thoroughly and so tactfully as to invite wide public attention and comment. The jury system was finally changed so that convictions are now the rule rather than the exception, aldermen and other city officials were indicted and gambling implements and appurtenances worth many thousands of dollars were seized and destroyed. - With all this, however, the reading public is more or less familiar. The recent achievement of the municipal league, which probably has no parallel in the history of such civic movements is the agreement entered into between the league and a large number of the liquor dealers by which the latter hav eagreed to pay the costs of prosecution in the event of any violation of the law. They have also placed a fund of $5,000 in the hands of the league to prosecute any other dealer who may be guilty of violating the liquor laws of the state. It is also agreed that the agent of the league and his representatives are to have the right to inspect the premises of the saloon keeper at any time. Only a most thorough and effective campaign against law-breaking could have resulted in bringing the saloonkeepers to such unusual terms. Impure Drinking Wtaer is always a source of danger; dj'sentery and bowel troubles follow its use, every person should have handy a bottle of Painkiller (Perry Davis'), which will quickly-cure these distressing ailments. Be careful and see that the storekeeper does not pawn off some worthless substitute upon you as is sometimes done for the sake of a few cents extra profit. Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. Word From J. B. Dougan. Mr. James F. Griffin received a card from Mr. John R. Dougan, written at Dublin, Ireland. Mr. Dougan said they were enjoying their trip hugely, and the magnificent RiverLiffey was a sight worth seeing. Deafness Cannot Be Cured. by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound of imperfect hearing and wen it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give one hundred dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. and W. II. Sudhoff, Fifth and Main Sts. Low Fares to Hagerstown via Pennsylvania Lines. July 26, 29 inclusive, account Wayne County Fair, will be in effect via Pennsylvania Lines from Richmond, Anderson and intermediate ticket stations. Ideal Bread stands unequaled. Ideal is the pass word to the home of the hungry. A Very Close Call. "I stuck to my engine, although every joint and every nerve was racked with pain," writes C. W. Bellamy, s locomotive fireman, of Burlington, Iowa. "I was weak and pale, without any appetite and all ran down. As I was about to give up, I got a bottle of Electric Bitters, and after taking it, I felt as well as I ever did in my life." Weak, sickly, run down people always gain new life, strength and vigor from their use. Try them. Satisfaction guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., price 50 cents.

STRIKE SPREADING

Packers' Quarrel Has Now Extended to New York City. COMPKOMISE IS FAR OFF Eastern Packers Give It Out That Conference With Strike Leaders Would Be Unavailing. The Latter Thereupon Ordered tlio Men In New York Packing Houses to Go Out. Chicago, July 30. Unable to arrange a conference with the representatives of the New York packers, Michael J. Donnelly, president of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of America, has ordered a strike of all the members of his organization employed in New York by Schwarzschild & Sulzberger and the United Dressed Beef company. The order, which was telegraphed to New York last night, does not go into effect until Sunday, as the men in the Eastern packing plants do not report for work on Saturday. The decision to extend the strike to the East was not taken until after Mr. Donnelly and his associates had spent the day in fruitless effort to arrange a meeting with representatives of the Eastern packers who came to Chicago to acquaint themselves with the situation here. The general belief was that the New York packers had come West to make terms with the butchers, but if such was the case they changed their minds after investigating the progress that had been made here in working the plants with non-union employes. At 5 o'clock last night, when Homer D. Call, secretary of the national organization of the butcher workmen, made a final appeal over the telephone to the representatives of Schwarzchild & Sulzberger for a meeting between the members of that firm and the officers of his union, he was told that the Eastern packers had notning to offer the men should such a meeting be arranged, and that the conference would only be a wasta of time. When this announcement cf the Eastern packers had been communicated to Mr. Donnelly he decided on the strike order. That the probabilities of a settlement by the opposing interests in Chicago are as remote as ever, was plainly demonstrated when Henry C. Wallace of Des Moines, la., and A. L. Ames of Buckingham, la., called on the different packers with a proposition from the strike leaders offering to concede the most important point in the controversy if the employers would agree to renew peace negotiations. Mr. Wallace and Mr. Ames were told by the packers that there was no possible chance for any further conciliatory move and that the packers were now in a position where they could ignore the labor unions and that they proposed to do so. The packers' answer was delivered to the strike leaders, and the men from Iowa left for home. From a statement made by President Donnelly it would appear that the men are becoming anxious to get back to work. "We shall be glad to confer with representatives of the packers at any time," said Mr. Donnelly. "While I cannot say that our position is in any way changed, we are not anxious to keep up a running fight and shall be glad if a settlement can be effected." At a meeting of the leaders of the men on strike last night a resolution was adopted denouncing the city administration, including Mayor Carter H. Harrison, Chief of Police O'Neill and Inspector Hunt. The latter is the officer who arrested President Golden of the teamsters' union. It was also decided ' at the meeting to appeal to Sheriff Thomas Barrett for protection. What benefit the strikers hope to derive from an appeal to the county officials is Known only to themselves. A Touchy Texas Mob. Austin, Tex., July 30. John W. Larrlmore, a negro school teacher and Republican politician of state prominence, was taken from his home at Lockhart, thirty miles south of here, by a mob of eight white men and shot and killed. Mrs. Larrimore shot at the members of the mob with a pistol and she says she wounded one of them. No arrests have been made. Larrimore is said to have made an offensive remark which caused the attack on him. Child Confesses Wrecking Train. Hopeston, 111., July 30. Blain Castor and Webber Williams, lads eight years old, have been arrested charged with tampering with the switch which was thrown and caused a fatal wreck on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois railroad here. Castor confessed and implicated Richard Kyle, fourteen, and Porter Laird, twelve years old. Fireman James Frame was killed and three trainmen injured In the wreck. Two Trainmen Killed. Sharon, Pa., July 30. Running forty miles an hour a passenger train on the Pennsylvania ' railroad crashed Into an engine in a head-on collision at Sharpsville, causing the death of two trainmen and the serious injury of four others.

DAYTON & WESTERN TIME TABLE. (In effect July 21st, 1904.)

Leave Richmond for Eaton, West Alexandria, Dayton, Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Lima, Xenia, Springfield, Columbus, Hamilton and Cincinnati, every hour, 7:00 a. m. to 9:00 and 11:00 p. m. Two Hours to Dayton. Leave Richmond for Cedar Springs and New Paris at 6:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m., 10:30 p. m. New Paris specials at 7:30 p, m., 10:30 p. m. Last through car east of West Alexandria, 9:00 p. m. Through rates, through tickets to all points. All entirely new cars; clean, comfortable and swift. For further information call Home phone 269. C. 0. BAKER, Agent. Excursion Fares to West Baden and French Lick Springs via Pennsylvania Lines. July 22d to 25th, inclusive, excursion tickets to West Baden and French Lick Springs, account Meeting of Commercial Law League of America, will be sold fro mall stations on the Pennsylvania lines. For information regarding fares, time of trains, etc., apply to local ticket agent of those lines. Excursion Bates to Middletown via. Pennsylvania Lines. August 2nd to 5th, inclusive, excursion tickets to Middletown, account annual fair, will be sold via the Pennsylvania lines from Kokomo, Richmond and intermediate stations. For information regarding fares, time of trains, etc., call on local ticket agent. Reduced Fares to Cincinnati via Penn sylvania Lines. July 16th, 17th and 18th excursion tickets to Cincinnati, account Annual Meeting Grand Lodge, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, will be sold from all ticket stations on the Pennsylvania Lines. For information regarding fares, time of trains, etc., call on Local Ticket Agent of those Lines. Special Summer Tourist Fares via Pennsylvania Lines. Will be in effect June 25th to September 30th. inclusive, to Colorado, Utah, Wisconsin, South Dakoto and points in Southwest, For particulars consult ticket agents of Pennsylvania Lines. Domestic Troubles. It is exceptional to find a family where there are no domestic raptures occasionally, but these can be lessened by having Dr King's New Life Pills around. Much trouble they save by their great work in stomach and liver troubles. They not only relieve you but cure. 25 cents at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. Unremitting care used in the construction of Ideal Bread. For goodness sake eat Ideal Bread. "The Way to Go." Every Sunday, excursions via the Dayton & Western to Soldiers' home and Daylton, $1.00. Trains every hour. Go any time you wish. A clean and cool Sunday outing. No smoke, no cinders, no dust. 7-tf A HALF MILLION ACRES. $30.00 to Colorado and Return. Via Chicago, Union Pacific & Northwestern Line. Chicago to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, daily throughout the summer. Correspondingly low rates from all points east. Only one night to Denver from Chicago. Two fast trains daily. Tourist sleepiag cars to Denver daily. The North-Western Line Russia-Japan Atlas. Send ten cents in stamps for Ruk-so-Japanese War Atlas issued by the Chicago & North-Western R'y. Three fine; colored maps, each 14 x 20 bound in convenient form for reference. The Eastern situation shown in '"tail with tables showing relative v .!;ii naval .treiigth and tinar. cia.; resources of Russia and Japan. Address A. M. Waggner, 28 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, HI. Low Bates to Boston via. Pennsylvania Lines. August 12th, 13th, and 14th, excursion tickets to Boston, account National Encampment Grand Army of the Republic, will be sold from all ticket stations on Pennsylvania lines. For full information regarding f es, time of trains, etc., apply o local ticket agent of those ues.

blaze away Who cares? I'm fortified with an "Elorado" laoodeted collar, "The kjnj hat don't xcelt down."

The Eldorado steam Laundry No. 18 North Ninth St. Phone 147. Richmcrd, Irdian A FINE On Street Car Line In Boulevard Addition AT A BARGAIN W. H, Bradbury & Son Westcott Block. Harness For snow and harness for eve'y day use mean a difference in quality in some makes here they are identical in strength and durability. More style, of course, in fancy driving harness, but all our harness is made from erood stock, and every setmaintains our repu tation as to workmanship and finish. All sorts of horse equipments at very moderate prices ------ The Wiggins Co. THiVI " 3 A Practical. jV'4i. magazink r FOR THE GENTEEL HOUSEKEEPER EACH ISSUE. r.ONTA.'NS BCAUTIFUU.Y ILLUSTRATES DIOHES. DECORATIONS FOR THE TA3LE, DAINTY MENUS FOR ALL. OCCASIONS. ETC. !T IS THE AMERICAN AUTHORITY i ON CULINARY TCPIC3 AND FASHIONS. Current Issue JCC. $1.00 Pe Year TABLE TALK PU3. CO.. PMILA. solicitors wantco liberal. t"ms 1115 Chestnut St. The Happiest Home Is Your Own It is impossible to feel perfectly at home in the house of another. The only perfect hoBue feeling comes t thos ewho own the place where they live. I'll help to give you the real home feeling. The plan is simple, the cost reasonable. T. R. Woodhurst 913 Main street. mm 1904 1 M M 9150,000 FOR. Athletic ILvents la thm Great Arena atth Exposition TtR A ROUTE, XookattheMai OF THE SHOOT HUES

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